Originally Posted by mary meagher
I would much rather live in New York City. State leglislature there shows good sense.
Originally Posted by mary meagher
And all you chaps who believe or pour scorn on statistics, have you read that interesting little book called Freakonomics, by Stephen Levit?
Originally Posted by PTT
Not one of the 5 articles you linked attempts anything different to the one you previously linked which I showed to be flawed.
Originally Posted by PTT
And as you say, follow the money: your articles have thus far been solely on pro-gun sites, making them overtly biased. Kellerman's is available on a universities' website and funded by CDC, while the last two are on the US National Library of Medicine and National Institutes of Health website.
Originally Posted by PTT
While your previous "point" was that all of those areas close to or well above the national average in 2011, the data shows that in 1992 two were below the national average, which pretty much invalidates your original point regarding the data bot being representative.
The other thing to note about Kellerman is that it was conducted over 20 years ago and the peak of the US violent crime rate. Since that time, despite more guns being produced, purchased, and used, both violent crime rates and gun-related murders have steadily declined. Florida pass the first broad shall-issue concealed-carry law in 1987 and as I've shown, states quickly followed once they saw Florida's crime begin to drop. Remember, the 1980s in Florida was a very high crime time with the drug wars in S. Florida - I know, I grew up in Miami and didn't leave for college until '87. Miami Vice wasn't that far fetched. But an interesting thing happened. Despite the nation-wide cries of the 'wild, wild west' in Florida occurring due to the "irresponsible" allowance of every law abiding citizen to arm and protect themselves, Florida's crime dropped dramatically and swiftly, particularly in the high-density urban areas where the majority of crime occurs. Consequently, in the early 1990s, several states began passing concealed/open carry laws. Many of the western states already had these laws on the books (NM, WY, MT, ID, UT, etc). Kellerman's 1992 data is virtually irrelevant today, even if he was accurate (which I will not concede because he does not accurately include self-defense uses of guns preventing crime) because the nature of crime and the statistical occurrence of crime have radically changed to far lower rates than 1992.
Originally Posted by PTT
You've failed to provide any data at all. What needs addressing?
Originally Posted by PTT
That's a chuckle - I've never claimed "common sense" as a support for my argument at all. And if the data shows a correlation then there is highly likely to be (I can even tell you how likely, of you like!) a correlation.
Originally Posted by PTT
It's not the history I find a yawn, it's the continual use of anecdotal "evidence" as some sort of crutch. It's pointless lantern-swinging which doesn't actually counter any data at all; it merely proves that there are statistical outliers no matter where you look.
Enough statistics. The real issue is that,at the end of the day, the USA will always have a relatively high murder rate with guns simply because we have them. It's emotionally evocative to compare straight gun death rates between countries without guns to countries with guns, but I find the overall violent crime rate to be far more indicative of how 'polite' a society is, not which weapons we kill each other with. If you truly wish to compare gun murders, compare them between countries that have access to guns. I think you'll find we're near the bottom of that list. Besides, I'd rather be shot than bludgeoned or stabbed. And it is interesting to note that the current attempt to ban specific styles and types of guns is attempting to ban the style and type least used to kill people (about 300-325 total, not per capita) based solely on physical appearance. That is disingenuous at best. If the gun control people were truly interested in public safety, they would go after hand guns. But that is too ingrained in our culture, too accepted and it wouldn't stand a snowball's chance in h3ll. So, they grandstand after a drug-induced nut job kills kids and go after the "scary" looking weapons, give them new names, and compare them to military weapons and ask why you need one. All straw man arguments and red herrings. They just want a legal standing to categorize some guns as "bad" so they can get the rest of them later. The remainder of the irrelevant "common sense" gun laws that politicians blather on about are nothing more than collecting data on guns as a health issue and creating registries to make future confiscation feasible. This isn't tinfoil hat stuff, it's proven fact. It happened in the UK and Australia and that's why your gun control history is relevant to the discussion. |
I have a certain sympathy for the poor chap who lives in Detroit..... Detroit Crime Map Windsor Crime Map Twin cities, similar levels of gun ownership, yet poles apart. A compare and contrast piece in the Windsor Star. |
PTT:
Another question... There are three people resident in my house. Do we all have a 2.7 times higher chance of death by a gun or, since the study concentrated on households without specifying the number of residents can we share the risk equally amongst the residents meaning I really only have a .9 increase in risk. It's probably good to be a Catholic in this case because once you get to 8 kids you've practically erased the increased risk... I need more kids or a bunch of lodgers... :} |
sevenstrokeroll,
duncan...that's the of yo you isn't it? (I have no idea what you are talking about) we'll keep our guns and will try to make sure that they are only used in a legal manner. (That sounds like a perfectly sensible course of action) and we do hope you take piers morgan back to your side of the pond. (No thanks. You took him in. You can keep him) wow...australian cops don't have a right to their gun on off duty hours...what a waste. (I'm inclined to agree.) you all realize that our pilots are allowed (after training) to carry guns on the flight deck of airliners, right? (USA) (No, I didn't. Moreover, after training, I have no issue with anyone carrying a weapon.) Duncs:ok: PS. I'm off to wear the kilt in celebration of the birth of Robert Burns (25 Jan) and I intend to drink a number of warm beers. |
HrkDrvr, AA, etc.
Can I gently persuade you chaps to read the entire article in the Windsor Star that is flagged up by The Helpful Stacker? That is, assuming you are not completely unwilling to read something that differs from your fixed ideas? And I still don't see the relevance of this topic to Military Aircrew...... |
Originally Posted by PTT
(Post 7653242)
That compares to the >100,000 homicides per year by gun (source - CDC).
I'm reading 11.078 gun related homicides (out of 16.259 total) for 2010. That is quite a difference to the > 100.000 you mentioned and is less than 1/10th of accidents of all kinds and ~1,5% of all deaths. If you consider that many of the gun related homicides are mutual gang killings, the probability of Joe Average being shot to death at home or on the street appears not to be that dramatically higher than the probability of being stabbed to death under similar circumstances here in good old Europe. Being in a major urban area vs. rural area is likely to have a much much higher impact on probability of getting oneself deliberately killed by someone. Back to lurking... |
@ HrkDrvr
You showed it to be flawed because you disagree with the author's premise of how to use the data. We're back to lies, damned lies, and statistics at this point. I choose to believe Kellerman is flawed based on how he uses his data. The re-categorization of gun deaths as a health problem is illogical at best. Who do you think is going to disagree with the state-sponsored universities and health departments? Other universities? Typically not. Actually, if you look again, you'll find that murder with guns was higher in all three. Violent crime was somewhat lower in two of them. Kellerman's 1992 data is virtually irrelevant today, even if he was accurate (which I will not concede because he does not accurately include self-defense uses of guns preventing crime) because the nature of crime and the statistical occurrence of crime have radically changed to far lower rates than 1992. Since that time, despite more guns being produced, purchased, and used, both violent crime rates and gun-related murders have steadily declined. ... Despite the nation-wide cries of the 'wild, wild west' in Florida occurring due to the "irresponsible" allowance of every law abiding citizen to arm and protect themselves, Florida's crime dropped dramatically and swiftly, particularly in the high-density urban areas where the majority of crime occurs. ... I'd like to believe that it's taken as given that there are more guns today. Are you really unwilling to concede that there are more guns today in the USA than in 1992? Are you really unwilling to concede that both our violent crime and murder-with-guns rate have not declined every year? Are you unwilling to concede that in 1992 less than 10 of our 50 states had a broad shall-issue concealed carry law? Or must I really go cull those numbers from the FBI again (their website is not the most user friendly at times)? ... So, how do you manipulate the data that shows an increase in gun ownership and a decrease in violent crime and murder-with-guns rate to support your position? The point of the above graph is that choosing two sets of data in which there is even a very strong correlation does not mean that there is actually any underlying meaning between the correlation. You have to look at multiple factors before you can come to any conclusion of that ilk. That's the purpose of a multivariate study such as Kellerman's, and is one reason why your assertion that more guns = less crime is flawed. There are several others, including cherrypicking of data (what about other countries/states where there has been an increase in guns/change in crime stats?) and a lack of datapoints, meaning your margins of error are huge (you have about 20, one each year from 1992 to now). No, but you certainly imply it. It's not 'anecdotal evidence', it's your own history of demonizing of guns and taking them away from citizens. It's inclusion was not for any portion of the statistical debate, rather, to illustrate that you have been accustomed to having your rights removed, so therefore find it acceptable to demand it of others. at the end of the day, the USA will always have a relatively high murder rate with guns simply because we have them. If you truly wish to compare gun murders, compare them between countries that have access to guns. I think you'll find we're near the bottom of that list. They just want a legal standing to categorize some guns as "bad" so they can get the rest of them later. @ AA I don't care. PTT: Another question... There are three people resident in my house. Do we all have a 2.7 times higher chance of death by a gun or, since the study concentrated on households without specifying the number of residents can we share the risk equally amongst the residents meaning I really only have a .9 increase in risk. It's probably good to be a Catholic in this case because once you get to 8 kids you've practically erased the increased risk... I need more kids or a bunch of lodgers... @ henra You're absolutely right - I was basing it on 3.6 per 100,000 and factoring up for 310m people. I must have added or missed a zero in there. Typo, my bad, and thanks for pointing it out. That's why I link to my sources ;) 11,000 is still several orders of magnitude more than the 123 per year which AA mentioned, which was the point being made: far, far more people die from guns than are protected by them. If you consider that many of the gun related homicides are mutual gang killings, the probability of Joe Average being shot to death at home or on the street appears not to be that dramatically higher than the probability of being stabbed to death under similar circumstances here in good old Europe. |
duncan
I hope you have a nice time celebrating burns...duncan is a well known yo yo company and they made the best yo yos (children's toy and a deadly weapon in the philipines I think...no joke). how about sending piers morgan to to the Mid Ocean meating point and we both leave him there. what a goon.!!!!! |
Originally Posted by PTT
(Post 7653894)
What data are you basing that on?
Here in Germany we have roughly 2000 homicides annually of which less than 1000 are rated as first degree murder. Looking at the fact that the US population is roughly 4 times as big that leaves a factor of 2 for the homicide rate. Considering that in Germany we don't have much Gang violence and considering that the bulk of homicides are Gang related in the US I conclude that there is not a huge difference in the net probability for Non- Gang members in the US vs. Germany and thus Europe. The real differentiator for Homicide rate are probably rather social/economic factors, Switzerland being a point in case. Rich Country, liberal Gun Laws, low homicide, low crime rate. Germany: Medium wealthy Country, strict Gun Laws, low homicide rate, medium crime rate. UK: Don't know exactly, the somewhat dated figures I saw were not that far off the German figures but slightly worse. But that was a maybe 10year old statistic. May have changed since. Edit: Numbers are sometimes a bit difficult to compare as the definition of murder and homicide differs slightly in the different judicial systems. |
PTT:
And that just proves that you are closed-minded. Again, I suggest you ask your ex-wife about matters statistical. |
I'm off to wear the kilt in celebration of the birth of Robert Burns (25 Jan) and I intend to drink a number of warm beers. Me? I'm off to exercise a product of the Walther Company several hundred times this evening. I believe the German Air Force crews carry ones like it so there's the tie-in to military aviation! :ok: |
Brick:
Me? I'm off to exercise a product of the Walther Company several hundred times this evening. |
@ henra
What I meant was where are you getting the data on gang-related vs other crime, both for the US and elsewhere. Looking at the fact that the US population is roughly 4 times as big that leaves a factor of 2 for the homicide rate. Numbers are sometimes a bit difficult to compare as the definition of murder and homicide differs slightly in the different judicial systems. @ AA What a remarkably silly statement to make. That statement in itself demonstrates your limited reasoning. You can quote all the statistical mumbo jumbo you like but it doesn't alter the fact that to equate my desire to have a better chance of killing an armed intruder than being mythically "wiped out" by my six year old to my closed mindedness is quite preposterous. |
PTT:
It was your comment that you "don't care" which is closed minded. It simply shows that it really doesn't matter what evidence you are shown, you will never change your mind. That's pretty much the definition of closed minded. I'm quite willing to change my mind but, despite repeated requests, nobody has actually linked to a valid study which shows that guns make you safer. Thus, the educated gun owner has no worry about Kellerman's mental meanderings. |
You are right. One must be able defend oneself. So I guess you agree with North Korea's continual development of nuclear weapons.
AA If it was only you that was 2.7 times more likely to die because you own a gun, fine. But if it is your family, children, friends well I guess that ok as well, apart from the fact you do know these people. |
Originally Posted by PTT
Again, it's lies, damned lies, and people who misuse or misunderstand statistics. You fall into the last group.
Again, can you find no other comparable study that supports Kellerman's theory?
Originally Posted by PTT
Really? So death isn't a health issue now?
Originally Posted by PTT
No, murders (you did not specify by gun, and I have no idea if your source does either) was higher than the national avarage in one, about the same in another, and lower in still another.
Originally Posted by PTT
Anyone with the data, methodology, and intellectual honesty to do so in a valid manner. I'd expect that to come out of other universities, certainly: such establishments are in an almost constant state of discussion on such matters.
Originally Posted by PTT
The nature of shooting people with a gun has changed? How do you figure that? I'll grant that the overall incidence has changed, and that a new study would be welcome, but to claim that the statistics have totally changed based on a lack of data is nonsense. The null hypothesis is that nothing has changed.
Originally Posted by PTT
The point of the above graph is that choosing two sets of data in which there is even a very strong correlation does not mean that there is actually any underlying meaning between the correlation. You have to look at multiple factors before you can come to any conclusion of that ilk. That's the purpose of a multivariate study such as Kellerman's, and is one reason why your assertion that more guns = less crime is flawed. There are several others, including cherrypicking of data (what about other countries/states where there has been an increase in guns/change in crime stats?) and a lack of datapoints, meaning your margins of error are huge (you have about 20, one each year from 1992 to now).
Originally Posted by PTT
No, you're not.
Originally Posted by PTT
Despite your protestations, this is tinfoil hat stuff. "They"? Really? And, frankly, it's not what I am suggesting at all.
Henra has a good point. Most of our violent crime and gun crime occurs in major metropolitan areas. There was a link to a video several pages back that had statistics that showed controlling for population density radically altered the rates. The video noted that the overwhelming majority of violent crime and gun murders occurred in cities larger than 250,000 - these are rates, not total numbers. Much of this is gangland stuff, drug-related stuff, and it's not surprising. Growing up in Miami and having lived in at least one other major metropolitan area, I can tell you what is common sense; you stay away from certain areas. The same is true in London or Glasgow or Manchester. My point? Big cities create crime havens and many big cities are the ones with the strictest gun control (Chicago, New York, etc), so criminals aren't following the law there. I don't find that surprising, but perhaps you do. A friend was interviewed the other day. He had a great quote the Americans will appreciate, and maybe a few others as well. "[Tyranny is] not a wolf that dies. It’s a wolf that breeds, and it may not always be in your backyard, but it’s always looming on the horizon. It’s always looming on the horizon, and that’s why the Founding Fathers wrote it [Second Amendment] the way they did." --Kevin Tully, American Patriot |
Finest:
So I guess you agree with North Korea's continual development of nuclear weapons. You hold up a paranoid dictatorship that is unthreatened in the world yet keeps it's people in line by having them think they are on the brink of invasion by the rest of the planet so that their lack of food and basic necessities is because they must create "defensive" weapons all the while using the threat of starting a nuclear war so they can negotiate "stuff" to keep the rulers happy as a reasonable, self defense doctrine... You're incredible... In the literal meaning of the word... As to my family... Since Kellerman is twenty year old rubbish I can assure you that the weapons I hold are far more likely to be used against one who means us harm than any of the three in this household intent harm upon any other. |
You hold up a paranoid dictatorship that is unthreatened in the world yet keeps it's people in line by having them think they are on the brink of invasion by the rest of the planet so that their lack of food and basic necessities is because they must create "defensive" weapons all the while using the threat of starting a nuclear war so they can negotiate "stuff" to keep the rulers happy as a reasonable, self defense doctrine.. Hmm, there is no parallel here with a significant number of a the US gun holding population (non paranoid) believing that their Government is on the brink of becoming a dictatorship. Not in any way stating that you have but a fair number of gun owners here and elsewhere have stated that is the reason they have guns. I am honestly happy and thankful that you are a person who has their guns safely placed to prevent accidents, but without statistics etc I could bet on it that there is a significant number of people that do not do so. |
Originally Posted by finestkind
Hmm, there is no parallel here with a significant number of a the US gun holding population (non paranoid) believing that their Government is on the brink of becoming a dictatorship. Not in any way stating that you have but a fair number of gun owners here and elsewhere have stated that is the reason they have guns.
Tyranny takes many forms. The founders knew this. Not all tyrants come to power via a coup, rather, a good many of them came to power via the ballot box. A careful reading of history shows how well-intentioned people have eroded liberty, either deliberately or inadvertently, in an attempt to 'help' or under the pretenses of public safety. There were many who called GW Bush a tyrant for the Patriot Act. And just today, our FBI director was asked if it was legal for the government to kill a US citizen on US soil and he actually said he would have to check into it. The context of this discussion was the FBI's explanation of the legal aspect of killing an American citizen on foreign soil if he was deemed an imminent threat. The very discussion is unimaginable to most Americans - where is the due process guaranteed to every citizen? And who gets to decide "imminent threat". The Justice Department's position that the FBI was explaining was the due process was effectively practiced based on how they selected their targets. Really? Really? My point is, the concern about tyranny is real. It's not paranoia, it's preparedness. It is the realization that power corrupts and absolute power corrupts absolutely. My friend's quote is very applicable to this discussion: "[Tyranny is] not a wolf that dies. It’s a wolf that breeds, and it may not always be in your backyard, but it’s always looming on the horizon. It’s always looming on the horizon, and that’s why the Founding Fathers wrote it [Second Amendment] the way they did." --Kevin Tully, American Patriot |
I'm privileged to have some US relatives, and this has led to some interesting discussions.
I don't get the gun thing, I really dont. Sure when it was bandit country, but it's not. - Guns don't kill people they argue. Oh yes they do, They were designed for one purpose, and that's the purpose for which they're used and it's the reason why people have them 'to protect themselves' - If only (they said to me) Concealed permits were in that theater, the folks there would have dealt with him. Oh really? pitch dark, your engrossed in a movie and a shot rings out. Do you A: Hit the deck or B: stand up with the other 40 or so guns in the room and shoot who? I had a discussion last week, where I asked a lady (after a protracted discussion) - Ok, let me transport you to a land where guns are banned. - Why would you need a gun? Answer - Because he might have a knife. That tells you all you need to know. The land of the free is a country haunted by fear - fear of itself. We can talk statistics all we like but it doesn't change that, and until it does, everyday we await the next nutjob who wants his inevitable death on the front pages with his victims. In the meantime lets go near RAF Lyeneham in Wiltshire (Military aviation link folks...) Calne in Wiltshire to be exact, for the vision of a gun free world... I understand larger caliber vegetables such as Cabbages are to be banned. Turnip for the books as drive-by veg hurlers strike in Calne (From The Wiltshire Gazette and Herald) |
All times are GMT. The time now is 18:24. |
Copyright © 2024 MH Sub I, LLC dba Internet Brands. All rights reserved. Use of this site indicates your consent to the Terms of Use.